Googled it...Yeah, thought so. I remember the first time I saw one of those in a doctor's office. It was 2006! Way back then!Oximeter - is that the finger thing?
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Googled it...Yeah, thought so. I remember the first time I saw one of those in a doctor's office. It was 2006! Way back then!Oximeter - is that the finger thing?
I don't think many stores here take them back (although I recall something about machines), we have depots that pay back the deposit. Chemguy took them in this week. Nice to have them out of the way, but unnecessary. He is often happy to be at home but lately I do kind of feel like he wants to be out just because he's being told he should be at home. For the bottles though, I feel like the risk is more to those working there than to those bringing them in. He was the only customer? client? there at the time. For now, I will let him have his mini excursions - buying things off a buy sell site and other things where physical distance is fairly maintained. He actually has an overnight out of town work trip planned this week. The hotel room I feel a bit uneasy about, but right now he's probably the bigger risk to everyone else there than the other way around looking at the numbers. I think I'll be a little more insistent with him as this worsens which really might not take long.Some of the big stores are suspending using reusable bags, and not taking bottles and cans. I thought about it tonight when I took out the garbage and recycling and my roommate had put empty pop cans in the garbage.( I took them out and washed my hands. Then I took everything out and washed my hands. Then I came inside and washed my hands, replaced the garbage bags, and washed my hands...and at some point in the next 15 minutes, I washed my hands. And I used paper towel to dry them)... I realized there's a case of empty soda water cans still here from weeks ago. Then I thought "we should be returning these"... then I thought of COVID...and wondered about returns, and the homeless and others who are poor who depend on bottle and can returns. Sure enough, some big stores have stopped taking them.![]()
The risk is that the homeless and poor depend on that money. In this neighbourhood, there’s a guy who rides by on a bike with a trailer/ wagon thing attached and collects empties from the blue boxes on recycling night. Up near my parents, not far from here...there’s a person i’ve seen several times driving by and doing the same in their car the night before recycling pick up. And there are many in town who go through the garbage cans for them. It’s not covid that they feel haunted by...it’s poverty. It was pretty sad already.I don't think many stores here take them back (although I recall something about machines), we have depots that pay back the deposit. Chemguy took them in this week. Nice to have them out of the way, but unnecessary. He is often happy to be at home but lately I do kind of feel like he wants to be out just because he's being told he should be at home. For the bottles though, I feel like the risk is more to those working there than to those bringing them in. He was the only customer? client? there at the time. For now, I will let him have his mini excursions - buying things off a buy sell site and other things where physical distance is fairly maintained. He actually has an overnight out of town work trip planned this week. The hotel room I feel a bit uneasy about, but right now he's probably the bigger risk to everyone else there than the other way around looking at the numbers. I think I'll be a little more insistent with him as this worsens which really might not take long.
*sigh* My parents - spending waaay too much time in stores that sell groceries. It's not just 1 or 2 stores in a day when they go and I feel like they are going out most days. My Mom very much wants all her usual products.
My step dad is getting sad. I can hear it in his voice. He’s in his early 80s. I can tell he’s having trouble because he is such a creature of habit. He was a school teacher and he’s very into routine and being able to count on certain things just the way they are. His whole world was just turned upside down. I know him well and he can’t handle the smallest changes without getting out of sorts. I also wonder if he was drinking when I talked to him. He was drinking a bit much a couple years ago...sneaking an extra glass of wine here and there and he actually told me he needed to slow it down. Recently, he got back into his exercise classes he went to with friends. Now, it’s all stopped and he’s sad. He doesn’t have that many years to enjoy as it is, and this is not going to be good for his general health. He said my mom, who’s 10 yrs younger, has been sleeping a lot. My guess is she’s depressed because she was so busy volunteering for the theatre...stage design and costumes - it gave her purpose and a creative outlet (and praise for her talent, she seems to need) and that’s been stopped altogether. She can’t get together to do things with her friends. It’s hard on people and their quality of life. In my opinion, disability, decline in function, is easier to accept than sudden social/ societal decline, loss of real life connection and activities...anything...it can change but we all need something going on that gets us up in the morning. This might be easier for introverts. But if one is not...this might be devastating. I can handle my own company. I like to socialize sometimes, in small groups though. I enjoy sitting inside or outside cafes, chatting with one person at a time. I like to go to church when I go, etc. I like my home group. I like seeing some people at work.I don't think many stores here take them back (although I recall something about machines), we have depots that pay back the deposit. Chemguy took them in this week. Nice to have them out of the way, but unnecessary. He is often happy to be at home but lately I do kind of feel like he wants to be out just because he's being told he should be at home. For the bottles though, I feel like the risk is more to those working there than to those bringing them in. He was the only customer? client? there at the time. For now, I will let him have his mini excursions - buying things off a buy sell site and other things where physical distance is fairly maintained. He actually has an overnight out of town work trip planned this week. The hotel room I feel a bit uneasy about, but right now he's probably the bigger risk to everyone else there than the other way around looking at the numbers. I think I'll be a little more insistent with him as this worsens which really might not take long.
*sigh* My parents - spending waaay too much time in stores that sell groceries. It's not just 1 or 2 stores in a day when they go and I feel like they are going out most days. My Mom very much wants all her usual products.
Somebody would have to be beside him to teach him how to do something like online tutoring... I'm not even sure how to set that up. I could figure it out but then I'd have to be there right next to him...we can't do that. My mom bought him a tablet a couple of years ago and he just couldn't get into it. He checks and sends email and plays cards on the PC. That's about as far as he's gotten, as far as his interest goes with technology. In the past few years my mom's and his age difference is showing. She uses her tablet...Facebook, Pinterest, she gets audio books from the library. There are creative things to do but she needs to have the actual attention of people and be out there, busy, or she gets depressed. I get down when isolated too long...like when I broke my knee-cap, I was on it too much because I had to get out at a point. I couldn't handle being stuck with them. I paid for it because it took twice as long to heal - I remember the stupid brace slipping and my knee wasn't stabilized properly. So, I learned about being stuck at home...I just like to have something to do that keeps me content. It doesn't have to be special. My mom's more specific. I don't think she could teach my stepdad how to do online tutoring, though, either. Even if she could. She might not have the patience.I wonder if you could suggest your parents get involved in on line activities. Certainly costume design and planning can be done at home
perhaps your step father could get involved in on line teaching. Tutoring .......
it can be very hard to be isolated.
re hotels
when we drive back from Florida I brought a jar of bleach. When we got to the room, I used a face cloth and my bleach and cleaned all the hard surfaces. Knobs, faucets, switches......not sure if it needed to be done, the hotel was very clean but it made us feel better
we are through the first week of quarantine after returning from the USA. feeling Good so far
medium.com
Just how can they properly look after people like that?
The technology is out there (I'm messing with one example even as we speak) but not widespread or widely used
The BP machine my husband uses has the capacity to send data using wifi or bluetooth. I understand there are other devices with this capacity.
Fine but not everyone lives with a tight family. Probably just as many don't.![]()
Social Distancing Is Dead Serious. Hold the Line.
‘This virus is unforgiving to unwise choices’medium.com
Fine but not everyone lives with a tight family. Probably just as many don't.